eruption of Thera
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- Cornell University - Cornell Tree-Ring Laboratory - Dating the Thera (Santorini) eruption: archaeological and scientific evidence supporting a high chronology
- San Diego State University - The Department of Geological Sciences - How Volcanoes Work - Santorini Eruption
- Canadian Museum of History - Volcanic Eruption at Thera
- Ancient Origins - The precious remains of Akrotiri, an ancient city obliterated in the great eruption of Thera
- University of Pittsburgh - Forbes and Fifth - The Eruption of Thera
- World History Encyclopedia - Thera
eruption of Thera, devastating Bronze Age eruption of a long-dormant volcano on the Aegean island of Thera, about 70 miles (110 km) north of Crete. Earthquakes, perhaps contemporaneous with the eruption, shattered Knossos and damaged other settlements in northern Crete. The Thera eruption is thought to have occurred about 1500 bce, although, on the basis of evidence obtained during the 1980s from a Greenland ice-core and from tree-ring and radiocarbon dating, some scholars believe that it occurred earlier, possibly during the 1620s bce. Ash and pumice from the eruption have been found as far away as Egypt and Israel, and there has been speculation that the eruption was the source of the legend of Atlantis and of stories in the Old Testament book of Exodus.